A blog about my landscape image making. On landscape imaging in general, bits of history and related disciplines (Architecture, Geography, Neuro Science, Philosophy and whatever happens to get my attention)

2011-11-23

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versione italiana in coda

Complexity in landscape

Despite the general rule that wants the project come first in the last years I have, frequently, tested some ideas assembling pictures before they got to the resemblance of a well defined project. One of these projects is about the liminal places, grown from my observations of the way in which the city of Milan goes on expanding in the south (/east,/west).

The urban expansion progresses occupying sparse spots that get filled up in time by a progressive division of the available space by roads or other connecting infrastructures. The remnants of this division lies there either as memories of the previous space either waiting to be part of the next landscape building plan. One may be tempted to expect this to be a geometrical progressive process. The linearity of the process, though, is broken by the the distribution of the private property, as it got configured along the time, by the persistence other human activities favoured by the richness of the soil and the need to preserve some kind of place identity. These are just few of the many factors coming into play. This is the way in which suburban spaces, as they are also called, reshape. The pace of the changes in those spaces is quite fast. Understanding, albeit partially, the dynamics of what is going on really gives and idea of what complexity in landscape formation is.

But complexity is also something that has always been considered evil in landscape image making (and, perhaps, at large, in all our western culture). It seems that the picturesque requires some simplifications to be successfully carried out. If I had to characterize most of the contemporary landscape photography I would certainly ground it into the cultural clash against complexity.